speaking of cheese...
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- Skilled Systems Installer
- Posts: 244
- Joined: Sun Oct 16, 2005 8:33 pm
- Boat Name: Ariel
- Boat Type: Cape Dory 36
- Location: St. Joseph, Michigan
- Contact:
Say 'cheese!'
Oh, trust me, you don't know the half of it!!
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- Damned Because It's All Connected
- Posts: 2847
- Joined: Tue Apr 08, 2003 9:32 am
- Boat Name: Triton
- Boat Type: Grand Banks 42
- Location: L.I. Sound
Re: Say 'cheese!'
c'mon! it's the "Ramblings" section. Tell us the other half!David VanDenburgh wrote:Oh, trust me, you don't know the half of it!!
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- Skilled Systems Installer
- Posts: 244
- Joined: Sun Oct 16, 2005 8:33 pm
- Boat Name: Ariel
- Boat Type: Cape Dory 36
- Location: St. Joseph, Michigan
- Contact:
Ok
That boat hails from my home port of St. Joseph, Michigan. Two years ago it lay nearly derelict at a local marina, the cabin sole awash, the interior musty and moldy, the deck and hull in pretty sad condition. Then some guy started poking around, showing interest in the boat. He would wander around the marina and eventually drift over to me as I was working on Ariel and strike up a conversation. He was/is one of those guys, full of talk and not much else. He managed to turn a discussion about buffing the topsides into "yeah, I gotta paint my deck, too." Talk about a bowsprit sent his eyeballs into a frenzied search as he tried to figure out which part of the boat I was referring to.
Well, turns out he bought the boat, "fixed" her up, and got her in the water. I saw him out on the water a couple of times during the summer, his jib luff slack, the sails always close hauled no matter the tack, and his bow cutting erratic paths through the waves - about what I expected. Then one day as I had just exited the channel, hoisted sail and headed off shore, I see him off my port side heading toward the channel. Apparently he saw me, too. He throws the helm hard over, and begins powering at full throttle toward me, his "doused" jib sliding higher and higher up the forestay with each wave. He must have chased me for about five minutes before he finally got close enough that I began to get nervous - it's hard to tell what a person like that might inadvertently do. He continued to close on Ariel's rear and I started thinking about evasive action. About 30 feet astern, his outboard revving at full throttle, he spins his boat around and heads in with nary a wave. It was all sort of weird, and not just a little nerve wracking.
There, that's about half of it. Just one of those guys.
Well, turns out he bought the boat, "fixed" her up, and got her in the water. I saw him out on the water a couple of times during the summer, his jib luff slack, the sails always close hauled no matter the tack, and his bow cutting erratic paths through the waves - about what I expected. Then one day as I had just exited the channel, hoisted sail and headed off shore, I see him off my port side heading toward the channel. Apparently he saw me, too. He throws the helm hard over, and begins powering at full throttle toward me, his "doused" jib sliding higher and higher up the forestay with each wave. He must have chased me for about five minutes before he finally got close enough that I began to get nervous - it's hard to tell what a person like that might inadvertently do. He continued to close on Ariel's rear and I started thinking about evasive action. About 30 feet astern, his outboard revving at full throttle, he spins his boat around and heads in with nary a wave. It was all sort of weird, and not just a little nerve wracking.
There, that's about half of it. Just one of those guys.
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- Skilled Systems Installer
- Posts: 244
- Joined: Sun Oct 16, 2005 8:33 pm
- Boat Name: Ariel
- Boat Type: Cape Dory 36
- Location: St. Joseph, Michigan
- Contact:
Re: Say 'cheese!' Resurrected
Sorry to resurrect this one but it's winter, our boats - many of them - are on the hard, and a good chuckle promotes longevity.Figment wrote:c'mon! it's the "Ramblings" section. Tell us the other half!David VanDenburgh wrote:Oh, trust me, you don't know the half of it!!
I came across this photo on the yacht club web site. It was taken during one of the Tuesday night regattas. It's the boat that started this thread at the hands of her former skipper. Such style. Such grace. Such seamanship. (Is it just me, or does the guy on the bow look like he's ready to jump ship?)

David
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- Almost a Finish Carpenter
- Posts: 89
- Joined: Thu Jan 04, 2007 5:05 pm
- Boat Name: Twize
- Boat Type: Pearson Renegade
- Location: Mattapoisett Mass
- Contact:
Its great to see a sailboat with its sails trim and fit for a tuesday night regatta. Good old sailstar corsair 24 I believe. I had an ol' buddy who owned one, I sailed on it several times. Spacious little cruiser, build heavy, slow as molasses. It was nerve racking sailing along side him, as I couldn't keep my boat sailing slow enough for him to keep up with me.
JP
Renegade #153 TWIZE
It never ends!
Renegade #153 TWIZE
It never ends!
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- Skilled Systems Installer
- Posts: 244
- Joined: Sun Oct 16, 2005 8:33 pm
- Boat Name: Ariel
- Boat Type: Cape Dory 36
- Location: St. Joseph, Michigan
- Contact:
Carpe Diem
"Seas the Day." It's just visible in the photo above.Rachel wrote:The initial photo was of the transom (boat was listed on e-bay). Had the name "Celtic Wind" but then also something else kind of odd on the transom too, lettering-wise, but I can't remember that.